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Deals and Development

The Political Dynamics of Growth Episodes

Edited by Lant Pritchett, Kunal Sen, and Eric Werker

Description

This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. When are developing countries able to initiate periods of rapid growth and why have so few of these countries been able to sustain growth over decades? Deals and Development: The Political Dynamics of Growth Episodes seeks to answer these questions and many more through a novel conceptual framework built from a political economy of business-government relations.

Economic growth for most developing countries is not a linear process. Growth instead proceeds in booms and busts, yet most frameworks for thinking about economic growth are built on the faulty assumption that a country's economic performance is largely stable. Deals and Development explains how growth episodes emerge and when growth, once ignited, is maintained for a sustained period. It applies its new framework to examine the growth of countries across a range of institutional and political contexts in Africa and Asia, using the examples of Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Malaysia, Thailand, Ghana, Liberia, Malawi, Rwanda and Uganda. Through these country analyses it demonstrates the explanatory power of its framework and the importance of feedback cycles in which economic trends interact with political behaviour to either sustain or terminate a growth episode.

Offering a lens through which to analyse complex scenarios and unwieldy amounts of information, this book provides actionable levers of intervention to bring around reform and improve a country's chance at achieving transformative economic growth.

Deals and Development

The Political Dynamics of Growth Episodes

Edited by Lant Pritchett, Kunal Sen, and Eric Werker

Table of Contents

1: Deals and development - An introduction to the conceptual framework, Lant Pritchett, Kunal Sen, and Eric Werker 2: Deals and development in a resource-dependent, fragile state: The political economy of growth in Liberia 1960-2014, Eric Werker and Lant Pritchett 3: Powerbrokers and patronage: Why Malawi has failed to structurally transform and deliver inclusive growth, Jonathan Said and Khwima Singini 4: Navigating the deals world: The politics of economic growth in Bangladesh, Mirza Hassan and Selim Raihan 5: Not minding the gap: Unbalanced growth and the hybrid political settlement in Cambodia, Tim Kelsall and Heng Seiha 6: Political settlements and structural change: Why growth has not been transformational in Ghana, Robert Darko Osei, Charles Ackah, George Domfe, and Michael Danquah 7: Dominance and deals in Africa: How politics shapes Uganda's transition from growth to transformation, Badru Bukenya and Sam Hickey 8: The disorder of miracle growth in Rwanda: Understanding the limitations of transitions to open ordered development, Pritish Behuria and Tom Goodfellow 9: The stroll, the trot, and the sprint of the elephant: Understanding Indian growth episodes, Kunal Sen, Sabyasachi Kar, and Jagadish Prasad Sahu 10: The politics of structural (de)transformation: The unravelling of Malaysia and Thailand's dualistic deals strategies, Kunal Sen and Matthew Tyce 11: Searching for a 'recipe' for episodic development, Lant Pritchett, Kunal Sen, and Eric Werker

Deals and Development

The Political Dynamics of Growth Episodes

Edited by Lant Pritchett, Kunal Sen, and Eric Werker

Author Information

Edited by Lant Pritchett, Professor of the Practice of International Development, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, US, Kunal Sen, Professor of Development Economics, Global Development Institute University of Manchester, UK, and Eric Werker, Associate Professor of Strategy and International Business, Beedie School of Business, Simon Fraser University, Canada

Lant Pritchett is Professor of the Practice of International Development at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, a Senior Fellow of the Center for Global Development, and a senior fellow of BREAD. He has been part of the team producing many World Bank reports, including World Development Report 1994: Infrastructure for Development, and World Development Report 2004: Making Services Work for the Poor. In addition he has authored (alone or with one of his 22 co-authors) over 50 papers published in refereed journals, chapters in books, or as articles, as least some of which are sometimes cited. In 2017, he published Building State Capability: Evidence, Analysis, Action (co-authored with Matt Andrews and Michael Woolcock) with Oxford University Press.

Kunal Sen is Professor of Development Economics in the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester, and Joint Research Director of the DFID-UK funded Effective States and Inclusive Development (ESID) Research Centre. His current research is on the political economy of development. Kunal Sen's recent authored books are The Political Economy of India's Growth Episodes and Out of the Shadows? The Informal Sector in Post-Reform India. He has won the Sanjaya Lall Prize in 2006 and Dudley Seers Prize in 2003 for his publications.

Eric Werker is Associate Professor in the Beedie School of Business at Simon Fraser University and academic lead from SFU to the Canadian International Resources and Development Institute. He researches how less developed countries can build more thriving and inclusive private sectors, particularly when they are rich in natural resources, and how international actors can play a positive role in creating successful societies. In previous roles, Eric was on the faculty of Harvard Business School, ran the International Growth Centre Liberia program, and worked as a consulting economist at Conservation International and the Millennium Challenge Corporation.

Contributors:

Charles Ackah- Senior Research Fellow and Head of the Economic Division, Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER), University of Ghana; External Research Fellow at the Centre for Research in Economic Development and International Trade (CREDIT), University of Nottingham, UK. Pritish Behuria- Fellow, Department of International Development, London School of Economics and Political Science. Badru Bukenya- Lecturer, Department of Social Work and Social Administration, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda. Michael Danquah- Senior Lecturer, Department of Economics, University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana. George Domfe- Development Economist and Research Fellow, Centre for Social Policy Studies (CSPS), College of Humanities, University of Ghana. Tom Goodfellow- Senior Lecturer, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, University of Sheffield; Fellow of the Sheffield Institute for International Development, Sheffield, UK. Mirza M Hassan- Adjunct Fellow, BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD), BRAC University, Bangladesh. Sam Hickey- Professor of Politics and Development, Global Development Institute, University of Manchester; Joint Research Director, Effective States and Inclusive Development (ESID) Research Centre, UK. Sabyasachi Kar- Professor at the Institute of Economic Growth, India; Honorary Senior Research Fellow, The University of Manchester, UK. Tim Kelsall- Senior Research Fellow, Overseas Development Institute, London; Honorary Research Fellow, University of Manchester, UK Robert Darko Osei- Associate Professor, Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER), University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana. Selim Raihan- Professor, Department of Economics, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh; Executive Director, South Asian Network on Economic Modeling (SANEM). Jagadish Prasad Sahu - PhD candidate, Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India. Jonathan Said, Country Manager of the Africa Governance Initiative (AGI), Liberia; Head of AGI's Private Sector Development Practice, Liberia. Seiha Heng Khwima Singini- Development Economist, Imani Consultants Limited, Malawi; Economic Consultant, Foster Lewis. Matthew Tyce- PhD Candidate, The University of Manchester's Global Development Institute, Manchester, UK.